A small needle biopsy can find cancer, but sometimes it leaves a messy hole behind. Doctors worry this mess might let cancer cells spread. Now, new data shows you can still save your breast.
Breast cancer is common, and finding it early is key. Many women get a vacuum-assisted breast biopsy (VABB) to check suspicious lumps. This procedure uses a special device to remove tissue without a big cut.
But here is the catch. Sometimes, the biopsy leaves a blood clot or an empty space inside the breast. Doctors call this a hematoma or a residual cavity. There is a fear that these spaces might let cancer cells escape into healthy tissue.
If a patient has cancer after the biopsy, the standard plan is often a full removal of the breast, called a mastectomy. This guarantees clear margins but changes a woman's body forever. Many women want to keep their breast if possible. They ask if a smaller surgery, called breast-conserving surgery (BCS), is safe.
The Surprising Shift
For years, the rule was simple. If a biopsy left a mess and found cancer, do the big surgery. The logic was that the messy area made it hard to see where the cancer ended. Cutting too close might leave cancer behind.
But here is the twist. A new five-year study challenges this old fear. Researchers looked at women who had cancer found after a VABB. They wanted to know if keeping the breast hurt their long-term health. The answer might surprise you.
Think of the biopsy site like a hole in a wall. If you just plug it with a clot, the wall is weak. But if you clean the hole out completely, the wall is strong again.
In the body, the biopsy creates a cavity. Cancer cells need a path to spread. If the surgeon removes the cavity and all the tissue around it, there is no path left. The study suggests that clearing the space is the most important step. As long as the edges of the cut are clean, the messy history of the biopsy does not matter.
The team studied 124 women who had a VABB between 2016 and 2020. Most of them had lumps that looked mostly benign, but cancer was found inside.
The doctors split these women into two groups. One group got breast-conserving surgery. The other group had a mastectomy. The researchers tracked them for five years. They looked at how the cancer grew and if it came back.
The results were very encouraging. In the group that kept their breasts, only a small number needed a second, bigger surgery later. This happened because the first cut did not get all the way to the edge.
Over five years, very few women in either group had the cancer return. The study found no big difference in survival rates between the two groups. Women who kept their breast did just as well as those who had it removed.
This doesn't mean this treatment is available yet.
That sentence is important. It means the study shows safety, but it does not mean every doctor will do this tomorrow. The key finding is that clearing the cavity makes the smaller surgery safe.
If you have a suspicious lump and get a biopsy, do not panic if cancer is found. You might still be able to keep your breast. Talk to your surgeon about getting clear margins. This means removing the cavity and the tissue around it completely.
You should also ask about the location of the tumor. The study noted that tumor location was the only difference between the groups at the start. If the cancer is in a spot where a smaller surgery works well, ask if BCS is an option for you.
This research gives hope to many women. It shows that a messy biopsy site is not a dead end. Future studies will look at more patients to confirm these results. Until then, the message is clear: talk to your doctor about your options. Clearing the space is the most important step for a good outcome.